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"The Development of Self-Regulation in Early Childhood: Experiential Canalization of Brain and Behavior"

Presenters:

Clancy Blair, Ph.D.

Professor of Applied Psychology, NYU

Event Dates:

April 26, 2012

Location:

Campus Center 904-08

Event Time:

11:00 am- 12:00 pm

The Center for Research on Families warmly welcomes Clancy Blair, Professor of Applied Psychology at New York University, to the UMass campus as part of the Tay Gavin Erickson Lecture Series.

Dr. Blair is a developmental psychologist who studies self-regulation in young children. His primary interest concerns the development of cognitive abilities referred to as executive functions and the ways in which these aspects of cognition are important for school readiness and early school achievement. He is also interested in the development and evaluation of preschool and elementary school curricula designed to promote executive functions as a means of preventing school failure. In 2002, Blair and his colleagues at Penn State University and at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill received funding from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development for a longitudinal, population-based study of family ecology and child development beginning at birth. In his part of the project, Blair is examining interaction between early experiential and biological influences on the development of executive functions and related aspects of self-regulation. Ultimately, Blair and his colleagues plan to follow this sample through the school years and into young adulthood. Prior to coming to NYU, Blair spent ten years as an assistant and then associate professor in the department of Human Development and Family Studies at Penn State. He received his doctorate in developmental psychology and a master's degree in public health from the University of Alabama at Birmingham in 1996.